<p>I am confused about ACT score-choice vs SAT score-choice. There is a list for all the schools that accept SAT score choice, but none for ACT score-choice. With this being said, how do I know if the school I am applying to(in this case Emory) allows ACT score-choice or that I send all act scores because it isn't very clear on their website. Any clarification on this would be great!</p>
<p>Emory allows you to send whatever tests you want to send for either SAT or ACT. It superscores SAT, meaning it uses to determine admission the highest section scores from multiple tests if you send more than one, and thus it is often to your advantage to submit multiple tests. It does not superscore the ACT and if you submit multiple ACTs it uses that test with the highest composite score.</p>
<p>For colleges that superscore ACT see [Colleges</a> that superscore the ACT College Admissions Counseling](<a href=“http://www.collegeadmissionspartners.com/college-testing/colleges-superscore-act/]Colleges”>Colleges that superscore the ACT - BS/MD Admissions by College Admissions Partners).</p>
<p>As to ACT and score choice in general, there are colleges that require you to submit all your ACT scores and those that do say so on their sites. Otherwise, I am unaware of any site that provides alistmof colleges that require all ACT scores. Nevertheless, ACT does not really have “score choice” like SAT. That is because it sends only one test score per order and if you want to send a second test you have to do another order and pay another fee per college.</p>
<p>Do you happen to know if Emory is one of those schools that require you to send all ACT scores? It isn’t stated very clearly on their website. Also, lets say I do worse on the upcoming ACT in September. Can I choose not to send that score to Emory at all, and only send my highest composite since they don’t superscore it anyway?</p>
<p>I must not have been clear. You are not required to provide all scores to Emory. You can send whichever tests you want to send and withhold whichever ones you want to withhold. You are required to provide one SAT or, alternatively, one ACT. Anything else is up to you (it recommends but does not require SAT subject tests).</p>
<p>I am not trying to be picky but could you maybe provide a direct link where Emory explicitly says they do this? It isn’t that I don’t trust you i just want some concrete evidence. :)</p>